ASSESSMENTS
Gaza Is Bringing Egypt and Qatar Closer, but It Can't Keep Them Together
Sep 25, 2018 | 09:00 GMT

A Palestinian man walks past a shuttered health center provided by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) during a strike of all UNRWA institutions in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip on Sept. 24. Washington has provided more than $350 million per year for the agency, which helps Palestinian refugees. However, the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump withdrew funding earlier this year.
(SAID KHATIB/AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- A comprehensive solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict remains extremely far off.
- Concerned powers such as Israel, the United States, Egypt and the Gulf states are all carrying out policies intended to prevent a major war in Gaza.
- Qatar and Egypt, two ideological foes, are seeking the same objective of a stable Gaza, but neither of them controls enough of the situation to prevent a full-on return to war.
- The two states will only tolerate one another so long as an Israeli-Palestinian truce holds — and if it falls apart, each will try to pin blame on the other.
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